Do you think that could backfire and ostracize the person who only speaks Spanish, the diehard bachata fan?
I’ve thought about that and it can backfire. Like I said earlier, that’s why it’s 50/50. You are either going to love me or hate me. You’re either going to accept me as a bachatero or not accept me. I’ve put in my years. I’ve proved myself. Toby Love is a bachatero. Only now you can say Toby is an R&B bachatero. I have thought about that because Dominicans are very proud of their music but when they called me from Santo Domingo, from the motherland of bachata, and they told me that we were popping out there and that we were in every corner making noise — it’s good to hear. People are actually accepting something different. Sometimes you want hear something different. I’m not trying to change bachata. As long as the people in DR are going for it, we’re good. Has salsa and merengue taken a back seat to bachata and reggaetón? In the ’90s merengue and salsa were all that was known as tropical music on a nationwide scale, in the clubs and on the radio. Now we’ve seen the rise of both bachat
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